Leonard "Lenny" Cooke (born April 29, 1982) is an American former high school and professional basketball player. Born in Brooklyn, New York, he is known primarily for being an early entry candidate in the 2002 NBA Draft. He had averaged 25 points, 10 rebounds, two steals, and two blocks per game in his junior year of high school. Following his junior year in high school, he averaged 31.5 points for the first eight games of his senior year. When he turned 19 in 2001, he was academically ineligible to play according to high school athletics' rules in his home county in New Jersey. Cooke is the subject of the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival selected documentary film Lenny Cooke by the Safdie Brothers.

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Lenny Cooke was a highly regarded young basketball player in high school, in the various basketball camps, and the AAU and tournaments. At one point he was considered one of the top recruits in the country, along with rival contemporaries like Lebron James, Carmelo Anthony, and Amare Stoudemire. Future NBA star Joakim Noah was one of his close friends.[1]

At Franklin K. Lane High School, in Brooklyn, Cooke was honored as Freshman of the Year. Cooke attended La Salle Academy in the Lower East Side of Manhattan in New York City from 1999-2000, where he averaged 30 points and 15 rebounds. He earned MVP honors in the 2000 Adidas ABCD camp. He was taken in by Debbie Bortner to attend Northern Valley Regional High School located in Old Tappan, New Jersey, from 2000 to February 2002.

One of the featured anecdotes of the biographical movie "Lenny Cooke" was the 2001 ABCD camp matchup between Cooke, the NYC area phenom and defending camp MVP, versus the lesser-known phenom from "nowhere" Lebron James, in which Lebron effectively supplanted Cooke as the most highly regarded prospect in the country.

At the end of the 2001-02 school year, Cooke had a year left to graduate, but had exhausted his high school basketball eligibility. Against the advice of Bortner, he chose to transfer to Mott Adult High School in Flint, Michigan, where he worked to get his equivalency diploma and work on his basketball game. Ineligible for school play, he was confined to pickup games and tournaments.

On March 8, 2002, he scored 21 points to help the Eastern Conference defeat the West 115-103, at the EA Sports Roundball Classic at the United Center in Chicago. At that point, he was rated #4 High School Player in the United States in the Prep Stars Recruiter’s Handbook.

At the end of the 2002-03 school year, Cooke had multiple options for basketball: North Carolina, Seton Hall, St. John's, Miami and Ohio State. He professed a preference for St John's in the NYC area, but it was never clear whether he would have been eligible.[2]

Amid enticing agent promises that explicitly stated a dozen NBA teams were seriously considering him and at least three guaranteed they would take him in the 1st round if he was available,[3] Cooke chose to bypass college and declare himself eligible for the 2002 NBA Draft, a decision which ended his eligibility to play college basketball.

To his surprise and disappointment, in the 2002 NBA Draft, all 29 NBA teams passed on Cooke in both rounds.[4] Because he was not selected, Cooke became a free agent, eligible to sign with any NBA team that wanted him.[5]

That summer, after being bypassed in the NBA Draft, he played in the Rucker Park Summer League in New York for the Terror Squad team. Later in 2002, Cooke was drafted by the Columbus Riverdragons of the NBDL. In April 2003, he tried out for the Brevard Blue Ducks of the USBL, and in May 2003 was signed by the USBL's Brooklyn Kings. In 15 games, he averaged 28.8 points and more than 9 rebounds per game.

He played well enough there that the Boston Celtics invited him to play on their summer league team, but that was the closest he ever came to playing in the NBA.[6] While he played in several games, to his lasting disappointment he didn't get in the game when his team played the Cleveland Cavaliers' summer league squad featuring their just-drafted LeBron James.[7] Later in the summer of 2003, Cooke returned to play in the Rucker Park Summer League.

Late in the summer of 2005, the NBA changed its rules to prevent future players from jumping directly from high school to the NBA.[11] Cooke, along with other one-time phenoms like him with athletic ceilings diminished greatly by the stunted development of a haste to get to the NBA too quickly, are considered to be the impetus for the change.[12]

Cooke is the subject of the 2013 biopic Lenny Cooke which documents his athletic rise, fall, and subsequent life after basketball.[13]

^According to the Collective Bargaining Agreement of the NBA, any potential player who wants to play in the NBA must go through the draft selection process once. If unselected, as Cooke was, a player then becomes a free agent, with the ability to negotiate and sign his first NBA deal with any team at any time. See http://www.nbpa.com/cba for the league's current CBA which incorporates the same "entry draft" selection process for entry into the NBA.